philosophy statement starters - nicki backlar's...
TRANSCRIPT
Philosophy Statement Starters Complete each sentence so it best describes your early childhood teaching philosophy.
1. The early education profession is important because
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
2. Quality early education means
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
3. To ensure a successful early educational experience, children should have
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
4. Children learn best by
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
5. The physical environment of the early education classroom should
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
6. The most important quality that a teacher can have is
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
7. The most important thing a teacher needs to know about a child is
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
8. Play is important for young children because
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
9. Curriculum and classroom planning are important because
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
10. Schedules and routines in an early childhood setting are important because
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
11. Active participation of families in an early childhood program is important because
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
12. I want to be a teacher (or I am a teacher) because
______________________________________________________________________________
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Chapter 2
ANECDOTAL RECORD
Name of observer: ______________________________________________________________________________
Date: Beginning time: __________________________ Ending time: ________________________
BEHAVIOR OBSERVED SUBJECTIVE INTERPRETATION
Chapter 3
Two-year-olds are still learning through their senses and require a variety of materials to enhance
their developmental needs. This form can be utilized to evaluate the types of developmental
opportunities that are available from the toy selection in a particular classroom.
Evaluating Toys and Materials in a Classroom for Two-Year-Olds
Developmental Task
Name of Toy, Number Available, and
Comments
Promotes large-muscle coordination
Promotes small-muscle coordination
Fosters auditory discrimination
Encourages response to sounds
Emphasizes tactile or multisensory stimulation
Promotes eye/hand coordination
Encourages two-handed coordination
Emphasizes tactile stimulation
Emphasizes color discrimination
Builds vocabulary
Encourages autonomy
Builds self-confidence
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
NURSERY RHYME BOOK
You will need to start a collection of 10 nursery rhymes to do with the children. They need to be
in a format that allows for easy access and which can be utilized by children. One suggestion I
have is to go on the Internet and search for nursery rhymes. To find pictures of the nursery
rhymes you can do an image search and type in the name of the nursery rhyme you want. You
will then have to copy and paste to a document and then print it off. A requirement is that the
pictures are in color-not black and white!!!!
Mount the picture on a study piece of poster board [can use manila folders cut in half], laminate
the picture [you can put words on one side, picture on the other], and then punch a hole through a
spot and lace a piece of ribbon, yarn, or metal ring through it for a handy song file. Make sure
the print size you use is large enough to be read when you are holding the picture at a distance of
18 inches.
Make sure you credit the website address you retrieved the picture from and place a © symbol at
the end of the address. This is a requirement because of copyright infringement laws. This
information must be placed under each one of the pictures you use.
You may come up with your own creative way to display your nursery rhymes. Try it out on the
children at your practicum site. Make sure your idea is practical and durable. DO NOT USE
COLORING BOOK PAGES!!!
If you do not know many nursery rhymes, look in books at the library or do a web search by
typing in the words “Nursery Rhymes.” Also, there is a difference between children’s songs,
children’s fingerplays, and children’s nursery rhymes. You need to focus just on NURSERY
RHYMES.
REQUIRED MINIMUM- 10 OF EACH
For example, this is the picture downloaded off the
internet for the nursery rhyme “Jack and Jill.”
http://www.vtaide.com/png/ReadWeb/jack-n-jill.htm ©
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Possible Book Suggestions for Story Mapping
Carle, Eric. The Very Hungry Caterpillar. (1979) (Collins) Philomel
Caseley, J. J. (2002). On the Town: A Community Adventure. New York: Greenwillow.
Dooley, N. (1991). Everybody Cooks Rice. Illustrated by P.J. Thornton. Minneapolis,
MN:Carolrhoda Books
Galdone, P. (2001). The Gingerbread Boy. New York: Clarion.
Galdone, P. (2001). Little Red Hen. New York: Clarion.
Gilliland, U. H. (1990). The Day of Ahmed’s Secret. New York: Lothrop, Lee & Shepard.
Gresko, M. S. (2000). A Ticket to Israel. Minneapolis, MN: Carolrhoda Books.
Hutchins, Pat. The Doorbell Rang. (1986) Greenwillow
Heiman, S. (2004). Mexico ABC’s: A Book About the People andPplaces of Mexico. New
York: Picture Window Books.
Johnson, C. (1955/1983). Harold and the Purple Crayon. New York: HarperTrophy.
Marshall, James. (1998). Goldilocks and the Three Bears. New York: Puffin.
Marshall, James. (2000). Little Red Riding Hood. U.S.A.: Grosset & Dunlap.
Numeroff, Laura. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. ( 1985) Harper & Row
Robart, Rose. The Cake that Mack Ate. (1986.) Little, Brown, Sis, P. (2000). Madlenka.
New York: Groundwood Books. (Available in English and Spanish).
PROPS FOR SPONTANEOUS DRAMATIC PLAY
Write a dramatic play theme that comes to mind for each of these props.
Flowers
Stamps
Mirror
Timer
Pail
Envelopes
Play money
Eggbeater
Cookie cutter
Quilt or wall hanging
Rubber stamp and ink pad
Empty refrigerator box
Furry brown blanket
White twinkle lights
Feather
Long, flowing scarf
Large empty cardboard carpet roll
Sea shell
Wooden picnic basket
Add 10 more ideas! ___________________________________________
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___________________________ Just look around you, in every corner and
closet. Props are waiting to be found.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 8
Sensory Awareness
Chapter 8 underscores the point that young children are much more in touch with their
senses then adults are. In some ways in order to live in our current society, adults must turn off
their senses to a great degree in order to accomplish the daily tasks of living and meet the
responsibilities of work and studies. If we continued to be ruled solely by our senses we might
always be late and not capable of completing anything because we would have stopped to smell
the roses-constantly!
However, if you are to appreciate the child’s view of the world, it is necessary that you
become more aware of your own senses. If you truly concentrate on taking in information
through your senses do you perceive information differently? In a way this activity requires you
to turn off your analytical mind and turn on your aesthetic perception.
For this activity, you will do the following:
A. Read some information regarding sensory awareness in children. Some of the following
links might be helpful:
Infants and Toddlers: How Children Develop Sensory Awareness
O http://www2.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=3745968
Promoting Sensory Development O http://hubpages.com/hub/Promoting-Childrens-Sensory-and-Motor--
Development Using Sensory Activities to Teach Wonder, Investigation, and Discovery
O http://www.extension.org/pages/Using_Sensory_Activities_to_Teach_Wonder,_Investigation,_and_Discovery
B. Explore Your Environment
a. Directions: Spend 15 minutes outside or inside your home or school. Use your
senses to answer these questions:
1. List everything you see.
2. Breathe in and describe what you smell.
3. Close your eyes and list the sounds that you hear. Where did they come
from?
4. Touch something (not another person) close by and describe how it feels.
How did it feel to slow down and just utilize your senses?
C. Spend at least 30 minutes in an infant or toddler room experiencing what the child
experiences in the classroom. This will entail you to be on the floor, so dress for comfort.
Try to follow the child’s lead. Note how the child uses his or her senses to make
meaning of the world.
D. Share your feelings about your experience with your classmates.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 9
Natural Scientists
Visit a preschool, kindergarten, and primary class during free time. Observe the children and
identify any of the inquiry skills below that you witnessed. Decide if what you observed is
child-directed, teacher-guided (supported), or teacher-directed. Briefly describe what you
observed under each skill and note the overall amount of time children spent utilizing process
skills. Can you conclude whether children are natural scientists or if they have opportunities
to be natural scientists?
Process Skill Description Setting (child-directed,
etc.)
Observing
Comparing
Classifying
Measuring
Communicating
Inferring
Predicting
Recording data
Overall Conclusion:
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 10
Math Knowledge and Competencies Rating Scale
Rate (on a scale of 1 to 10) your knowledge and competency for each of the identified mathematical
content components and process skills listed below.
For the knowledge scale: What is your confidence level regarding your ability to be able to explain to
someone else what each of these terms mean? As you observe children, would you be able to identify if
their play demonstrated involvement in any of these content components?
For the competency scale: What is your skill level for each of these mathematical content components?
Do you feel that you would know what kinds of materials you could use with children to enhance their
skill level in each of these categories? How confident to you feel about your ability to take advantage of
teachable moments or to design lessons that would enhance children’s knowledge and skills for these
mathematical content components and process skills?
Rating Scale: Poor (1) to Excellent (10)
Knowledge Competency Number sense and counting
One-to-one correspondence
Classifying and sorting
Patterns, functions, algebra
Geometry (shapes) and spatial
sense
Seriation
Measurement
Data analysis and probability
Problem Solving
Connecting
Reasoning
Communicating
Representing
Memories
Describe memories of your early math experiences and how they might have affected your current
knowledge level and competencies in the different categories.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Plan of Action A.
If you are an individual who has math phobias, had unfortunate experiences with math, or found your
ratings to be on the low side, discuss how you plan to resolve those issues.
B.
What do you think are the positive and negative aspects of learning about mathematical content and
process skills?
C.
Can you envision preparing yourself as a teacher who has developed math competencies and knowledge?
Identify potential barriers that you might have to overcome.
D.
Outline an initial plan to institute a developmentally appropriate math curriculum that would encompass
teaching mathematical content components and the utilization of process skills. To start, identify at least 2
Goals for yourself and 2 Goals for your potential classroom.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Books on Mathematical Concepts
Books on Numbers, Counting, Equations, & Fractions from
http://www.canteach.ca/elementary/theme2.html
Other Books on Counting:
1 2 3 Pop! by Rachel Isadora
Arlene Alda's 1,2, 3 by Arlene Alda
City By Numbers by Stephen Johnson
Cookie Count, A tasty pop-up book by Robert Sabuda
Count by Denise Fleming
Counting Wildflowers by Bruce McMillan
Each Orange Had 8 Slices - A Counting Book by Paul Giganti, Jr. illustrated by Donald Crews
Farm Counting Book by Jane Miller
Have You Seen My Duckling? By Nancy Tafuri
How Many Feet In The Bed? by Diane Hamm
I Can Count 100 Bunnies, and so can you! by Cyndy Szekeres
Jelly Beans For Sale by Bruce McMillan
Look Whooo's Counting Suse MacDonald
Mouse Count by Ellen Walsh
My Red Umbrella by Robert Bright
One Two, One Pair! Bruce McMillan
One Two Three: An Animal Counting Book by Marc Brown
Over In The Meadow by Olive A. Wadsworth and illustrated by Mary Maki Rae
Roar! A Noisy Counting Book by Pamela D. Edwards and illustrated by Henry Cole
Roll Over! A Counting Song Illustrated by Merle Peek
Splash by Ann Jonas
Ten in A Bed Mary Recs
Ten Black Dots by Donald Crews
Ten, Nine, Eight by Molly Bang
The Bad Babies Counting Book by Tony Bradman and illustrated by Debbie van der Beek
The Doorbell Rang by Pat Hutchins
The Icky Bug Counting Book by Jerry Pallotta and illustrated by Ralph Masiello
What Comes In 2's, 3's, and 4's? by Suzanne Aker
When We Went to the Park by Shirley Hughes
Picture books that introduce different math concepts:
Bigger and Smaller by Robert Froman
Jim and the Beanstalk by Raymond Briggs
Kathy's First Haircut by Gibbs Davis
The Line Up Book by Marisabina Russo
When Is Tomorrow? by Nancy Dingman Wilson
The Wing on a Flea by Ed Emberly
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Books on Measurement (Comparison):
Adams, Pam, Ten Beads Tall
Alborough, Jez, Tall
Aker, Suzanne, What Comes in 2’s,
3’s and 4’s?
Allen, Pamela, Who Sank the Boat?
Barner, Bob, Parade Day
Bernhard, Durga, Earth, Sky, Wet, Dry
Clark, Emma Chichester, Mimi’s Book
of Opposites
Eastman, P.D., Big Dog…Little Dog
Gordon, Sharon, Just the Opposite:
Fast/Slow
Gordon, Sharon, Just the Opposite:
Up/Down
Harper, Dan, Telling Time with Big
Mama Cat
Hoban, Tana, Big Ones, Little Ones
Hoban, Tana, Exactly the Opposite
Hoban, Tana, Is It Larger? Is It
Smaller?
Hoban, Tana, More, Fewer, Less
Jenkins, Steve, Actual Size
Jenkins, Steve, Biggest, Strongest,
Fastest
Jocelyn, Marthe, and Slaughter, Tom,
One Some Many
Lillie, Patricia, When This Box is Full
McBratney, Sam, Guess How Much I
Love You
Miller, Margaret, Big and Little
Minters, Frances, Too Big, Too Small,
Just Right
Murphy, Stuart J., The Best Bug
Parade
Murphy, Stuart J., The Greatest
Gymnast of All
Murphy, Stuart J., A House For Birdie
Murphy, Stuart J., Just Enough
Carrots
Murphy, Stuart J., Mighty Maddie
Nathan, Cheryl and McCourt, Lisa,
The Long and Short of It
Rathmann, Peggy, 10 Minutes till
Bedtime
Rosa-Mendoza, Gladys,
Opposites/Opuestos
Russo, Marisabina, The Line Up Book
Schreiber, Anne, Slower Than a Snail
Serfozo, Mary, What’s What: A
Guessing Game
Stickland, Paul and Henrietta,
Dinosaur Roar!
Tompert, Ann, Just a Little Bit
Books on Algebra (Patterns):
Adams, Pam, There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly
Arenson, Roberta, One, Two, Skip a Few: First Number Rhymes
Arnold, Tedd, Five Ugly Monsters
Andrews-Goebel, Nancy, The Pot that Juan Built
Baer, Gene, Thump, Thump, Rat-a-Tat-Tat
Baker, Jeannie, Window
Bartlett, Alison, and Wilson, Anna, Over in the Grasslands
Beaton, Clare, Daisy Gets Dressed
Benton, Linda, I See Patterns (Creative Teaching Press)
Berkes, Marianne, Over in the Ocean: In a Coral Reef
Brown, Marc, Hand Rhymes
Boynton, Sandra, Doggies
Boynton, Sandra, Hippos Go Berserk!
Burris, Priscilla, Five Green and Speckled Frogs
Cabrera, Jane, Over in the Meadow
Cabrera, Jane, Ten in the Bed
Christelow, Eileen, Five Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed
Christelow, Eileen, Five Little Monkeys Sitting on a Tree
Cole, Henry, Jack’s Garden
Dunn, Opal, Number Rhymes to Say and Play!
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Durango, Julia, Cha Cha Cha Chimps
Ellwand, David, Ten in the Bed
Emmett, Jonathan, Through the Heart of the Jungle
Evans, Michael, Over in the Meadow
Freeman, Tina, Ten Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed
Geddes, Anne, Ten in the Bed
Gunson, Christopher, Over on the Farm
Harris, Trudy, Pattern Bugs
Harris, Trudy, Pattern Fish
Henkes, Kevin, Shhhh
Ives, Penny, Five Little Ducks
Kalan, Robert, Jump, Frog, Jump!
Kimmelman, Leslie, How Do I Love You?
Kelly, Martin and Learis, Phil, Five Green and Speckled Frogs
Kubler, Annie, There Were Ten in the Bed
Langstaff, John, Over in the Meadow
Lass, Bonnie, and Sturges, Philemon, Who Took the Cookies from the Cookie Jar?
Lorenz. Juergen. Let’s Look at Patterns (Anness Publishing Limited, 2001)
Martin, Bill, Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?
Martin, Bill, Chicka Chicka Boom Boom
Miller, Margaret, Now I’m Big
Miranda, Anne, Let’s Get the Rhythm
Morozumi, Atsuko, One Gorilla
Murphy, Stuart J., Beep Beep, Vroom Vroom
Murphy, Stuart J., A Pair of Socks Peek, Merle, Roll Over! A Counting
Song
Roberts, Sheena, We All Go Traveling
By
Scherer, Jeffrey, The Ants Go Marching
Sharratt, Nick, My Mom and Dad Make
Me Laugh
Singer, Marilyn, Quiet Night
Stockham, Jess, Ten Little Speckled Frogs
Sweet, Melissa, Fiddle-I-Fee
Swinburn, Stephen R., Lots and Lots of Zebra Stripes
Taback, Simms, There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly
Taback, Simms, This is the House that Jack Built
Tuxworth, Nicola, Let’s Look at Patterns
Ward, Jennifer, Over in the Garden
Webb, Steve, Tanka Tanka Skunk
Westcott, Nadine Bernard, I Know and Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly
Williams, Rozanne Lanczak, Mr. Noisy’s Book of Patterns (Creative Teaching Press)
Yaccarino, Dan, Five Little Pumpkins
Zelinsky, Paul O., The Wheels on the Bus
Picture Books for Patterns See Carol Hurst's Children's Literature Site at http://www.carolhurst.com. Click on “Curriculum;” Scroll
down to Math and click on “Picture Books for Patterns.”
Shapes/Geometry
A Wing On A Flea: A Book About Shapes by Ed Emberley
Baby Bop Discovers Shapes by Stephen White
Boxes! Boxes! by Leonard Everett Fisher
Circles, Triangles, and Squares by Tana Hoban
Magic Monsters Look For Shapes by Jane Belk Moncure
Pancakes, Crackers, and Pizza: A Book of Shapes by Marjorie Eberts and Margaret Gisler
Shapes by John Reiss
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Shapes and Colors by Denise Lewis Patrick
Shapes, Shapes, Shapes by Tana Hoban
Shopping Spree Identifying Shapes by Monica Weiss
Spence Makes Circles by Christa Chevalier
Wilbur Worm by Richard and Nicky Hale and Andre Amstutz
Geometry Position and Space
Baicker, Karen, I Can Do It Too!
Carle, Eric, From Head to Toe
Cauley, Lorinda Bryan, Clap Your Hands
Cohen, Caron Lee, Where’s the Fly?
Crews, Nina, A High, Low, Near, Far, Loud,
Quiet Story
Dodds, Dayle Ann, Wheel Away!
Ellwand, David, Clap Your Hands
Hartman, Gail, As the Crow Flies: A First
Book of Maps
Hill, Eric, Where’s Spot?
Hoban, Tana, All About Where
Hoban, Tana, Over, Under and Through
Hutchins, Pat, Rosie’s Walk
Martin, Bill and Archambault, John, Here
Are My Hands
Marzollo, Jean, Pretend You’re a Cat
Newcome, Zita, Head, Shoulders, Knees,
and Toes and Other Action Rhymes
Portis, Antoinette, Not a Box
Reasoner, Charles, Who’s Hatching?: A
Sliding Surprise Book
Rosen, Michael, and Oxenbury, Helen,
We’re Going on a Bear Hunt
Walton, Rick, How Can You Dance?
Shapes
Aber, Linda. Grandma's Button Box
Arnosky, Jim. Mouse Shapes
Baker, Alan. Brown Rabbit's Shape
Book
Blackstone, Stella, Bear in a Square
Bryant, Megan. Shape Spotters
Burns, Marilyn. The Greedy Triangle
Carle, Eric, My Very First Book of Shapes
Carle, Eric, The Secret Birthday Message Carle, Eric. The Secret Birthday
Message
Charles, N.N., What am I? Looking Through Shapes at Apples and Grapes
Crosbie, Michael J., Architecture Shapes
Dodds, Dayle Ann, The Shape of Things Dodds, Dayle Ann. The Shape of Things
Dotlich, Rebecca. What is Round?
Dotlich, Rebecca. What is Square?
Dotlich, Rebecca. What is a Triangle?
Dotlich, Rebecca Kai, What is Round?
Dotlich, Rebecca Kai, What is Square?
Ehlert, Lois, Color Farm
Ehlert, Lois, Color Zoo
Emberley, Ed, Picture Pie
Emberley, Ed, Picture Pie 2
Emberley, Ed, The Wing on a Flea: A Book About Shapes
Falwell, Cathryn. Shape Space
Freeman, Don. Corduroy
Greene, Gowler, When a Line Bends…A
Shape Begins
Hoban, Tana . Round and Round and
Round
Hoban, Tana Shapes, Shapes, Shapes
Hoban, Tana, Circles, Triangles and
Squares
Hoban, Tana, Cubes, Cones, Cylinders, and Spheres
Hoban, Tana, Round and Round and Round
Hoban, Tana, Shapes, Shapes, Shapes
Hoban, Tana, So Many Circles, So Many Squares
Hoban, Tana, Spirals, Curves, Fanshapes and Lines
Hoban, Tana. So Many Circles, So Many
Squares
Hoban, Tana. Shapes and Things
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Hutchins, Pat, Changes Changes
Kaczman, James. When a Line Bends...A
Shape Begins
MacDonald, Suse, Sea Shapes MacDonald, Suse. Sea Shapes
Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum
Micklethwait, Lucy, I Spy Shapes in Art Murphy, Stuart. Circus Shapes
Pallotta, Jerry. Twizzlers: Shapes and
Patterns
Pienkowski, Jan. Shapes
Portis, Antoinette, Not a Box
Rau, Dana Meachen, A Star in My Orange: Looking for Nature’s Shapes
Reasoner, Charles, Shapes for Lunch
Reid, Margaret. The Button Box
Rogers, Paul. The Shapes Game
Rosa-Mendoza, Gladys, Colors and
Schlein, Miriam. Round and Square
Seuss, Dr. The Shape of Me and Other
Stuff
Shaw, Charles G., It Looked Like Spilt Milk
Theobalds, Prue. Shapes for Ten Tired
Teddies
Thong, Roseanne, Round is a Mooncake
Van Fleet, Matthew, Spotted Yellow Frogs
Wallace, Nancy Elizabeth, Look! Look! Look!
Williams, Rozanne Lanczak. I Have Shapes
Wilson, Zachary, A Circle in the Sky
Data Analysis and Probability Accorsi, William, Billy’s Button
Ahlberg, Janet and Allan, The
Baby’s Catalogue
Alborough, Jez, Clothesline
Anholt, Catherine and Laurence, All
About You
Cheltenham Elementary School
Kindergartners, We Are All
Alike…We are All Different
Grayes, Kimberlee, Collecting
Things is Fun (Creative Teaching
Press)
Hill, Sandi, Just Graphi It! (Creative
Teaching Press)
Hill, Sandi, Look and See (Creative
Teaching Press)
Hoban, Tana, Dots, Spots, Speckles
and Stripes
Hoban, Tana, Is It Red? Is It Yellow?
Is It Blue?
Hoban, Tana, Is it Rough? Is It
Smooth? Is It Shiny?
Hutchins, Pat, Which Witch is
Which?
Jocelyn, Marthe, Hannah’s
Collections
Machotka, Hana, What Neat Feet
Miller, Margaret, Whose Shoe?
My First Look at Sorting (Random
House, 1991)
Nagda, Ann Whitehead, Tiger Math:
Learning to Graph from a Baby
Tiger
Nechaev, Michelle Wagner, Our
Favorites (Creative Teaching Press)
Perry, Sarah, If…
Van Fleet, Matthew, Tails
Widdowson, Kay, Please, Mr.
Crocodile
Williams, Rozanne Lanczak, Buttons, Buttons
Winthrop, Elizabeth, Shoes
Picture books for Data Gathering
See Carol Hurst's Children's Literature Site at http://www.carolhurst.com. Click on “Curriculum;” Scroll down to
Math and click on Data Gathering and Picture Books.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
The Young Child and Mathematics, 2d ed. by Juanita V. Copley and published by NAEYC (2010) has a disc that contains lists of children’s books, both fiction and non-fiction, that could be used to explore mathematics with young children.
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 11
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 12
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 13
© 2015. Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 14